The Trick to Building Breadboard Ends || You'll Love This Quick and Easy Method!
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- čas přidán 16. 12. 2022
- Breadboard Ends are a very popular feature in furniture these days. There is a quick and easy way to make these while adding dollar signs to the price tag. Modern and tradition tables alike are being built in wood shops with this kind of design and style. Traditional woodworking has built these in a way that required a lot of time and effort, using mortise and tenon joinery. In this video I am using a much faster and just as effective method with modern tools and machinery that any woodworker or maker can build in any DIY shop. #breadboardends #joinery #woodworking
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I'm glad he got out the festool domino quickly. Saves me from having to watch the whole video.
Definitely didn’t know how to do this before!
Glad it was helpful !
Great video, really made it easy to follow!
Thanks man. I was hoping it was explained well!
I find that many people are calling this method of producing a Breadboard joint as an easy or trick method, should realize that this isn't a breadboard joint (or breadboard end) anymore. This is one reason it is easier since it isn't the joint anymore.
This is a specific kind of joint and using dominoes has varied so far from this joint as to not be this joint anymore. I would also challenge those who think that it is, to consider if one made in the same way with dowels would still be a breadboard joint or if the dowels were totally eliminated and used a butt joint was still a breadboard end.
It isn't the application of a board across the grain which produces this joint but the method of joinery, and the reason for doing this joinery in the first place.
Great idea if you have a domino machine. If you don’t own one, this method may not be as easy as the traditional method. Still I’ll bet it’s not that easy to drill that precisely to matchup with the holes in the floating domino tenon.
I find myself wondering if the dominos used are large enough. I have seen other woodworkers use the domino machine to make wider slots and then cut larger tenons to use for a breadboard. Please share your thoughts.
What size domino did you use?
My mistake. I thought you were actually going to teach something. Not teach how to use a Festool Domino.